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Buffalo's Japanese Garden cherry trees in bloom

Took a walk with my daughter over to the Delaware Park Japanese Garden here in Buffalo on Tuesday. Caught the evening light on the forest of cherry trees at the height of their bloom. It was stunning. The Japanese Garden sits on Mirror Lake in Delaware Park behind the Buffalo History Museum (the only building built permanent from the 1901 Pan American Exhibition where President McKinley was assassinated). Delaware Park itself was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of Central Park in NYC, Boston's Emerald Necklace and Washington DC's U.S. Capitol Grounds, among others.

The Japanese Garden has cherry trees that come from the trees
in Washington, DC, which were a gift in 1912 from the people of
Japan. The Buffalo trees are still young -- the oldest tree is
only about 10 years old. In 2012, 20 more were planted to match the 20 that were already there.

The Garden is a popular spot for wedding pictures. We had our wedding party pictures taken here. The Japanese Garden is also a stop on Garden Walk Buffalo -- complete with docents -- each year.

The Japanese garden itself was a gesture of friendship from Buffalo's sister city, Kanazawa Japan. The garden was modeled on Kenrokuen Garden in Kanazawa, one of the
most famous gardens in Japan. The garden was conceived in 1970, construction started in 1971 and it was completed in 1974. the original design contained over 1,000 plantings, nearly 20
globe-type lights, three small islands connected to the mainland by
bridges.

In 1983, the City and the adjacent Buffalo History Museum
began efforts to renovate the Garden. The upper banks were cleared of
overgrown vegetation, the bridge was repaired, the islands were
replanted and a seating area developed on the main island and extensive
new plantings of trees and shrubs were completed along the shore and
paths. During the mid-'80s, the main path along Mirror Lake was also
reconstructed as part of a larger pathway development throughout the
park.

In 1994, Friends of the Japanese Garden was
established (visit their Facebook page here) and submitted
a grant proposal to the city of Kanazawa Japan to fund the redesign and
construction of the garden landscape. Design and construction was
undertaken over the following couple of years by American landscape architects working hand-in-hand with Japanese garden designers, and American
contractors working together with a highly skilled Japanese garden
crew. The islands were restored with specimen Japanese pines and maples
pruned by Japanese garden experts, a natural stone stairway was
installed using stones brought over from Japan, and several stone
lanterns, in addition to a Japanese shinto gate, were imported from Japan
for the Garden.

In July 2004 the Buffalo Olmsted Parks Conservancy
(BPOC) took over the maintenance and management of Olmsted's Buffalo parks.
Partnering with the Friends of the Japanese Garden the BOPC has made
great strides to raise the level of maintenance in the garden, support
cultural events, and make capital improvements to the focal landscape
along Mirror Lake.

Friends of the Japanese Garden of Buffalo will host its first
ever cherry blossom, or sakura, event on Saturday, May 11, 3 p.m. at the
Japanese Garden. The event is free. Visitors are invited to bring a picnic lunch and check out the cheery
trees, which should be just past peak. There will also be new cherry trees planted during the
celebration.

The Garden is on a major city bike and walking path, so there is much traffic on a sunny day.

Abe Lincoln, sitting on the portico of the Buffalo History Museum has the best seat in the house.